Not on display
- Artist
- William Blake 1757–1827
- Medium
- Graphite, ink and watercolour on paper
- Dimensions
- Support: 371 × 527 mm
- Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Purchased with the assistance of a special grant from the National Gallery and donations from the Art Fund, Lord Duveen and others, and presented through the Art Fund 1919
- Reference
- N03351
Catalogue entry
N03351 Dante and Virgil Penetrating the Forest 1824–7 [A00005-A00011; N03351-N03370; T01950-T01956; complete]
N 03351 / B 8122
Pencil, pen and watercolour 371×527 (14 9/16×20 3/4)
Inscribed ‘HELL Canto 2 line 140’ b.r. in pencil,? not by Blake, and, on reverse in pencil, ‘92’ t.r., ‘N37 next at p 71’ t.c. and ‘Hell Canto 22’ along right-hand edge as seen with the paper turned through a right-angle Watermarked ‘WE’
Purchased with the assistance of a special grant from the National Gallery and donations from the National Art-Collections Fund, Lord Duveen and others, and presented through the National Art-Collections Fund 1919
PROVENANCE John Linnell; his heirs, sold Christie's 15 March 1918 (in 148, the entire Dante series) £7,665 bt Martin for the donors
EXHIBITED Tate Gallery (41 i), Manchester (48i), Nottingham (42 vi) and Edinburgh (56) 1913–14, as ‘Tu duca, tu signore, e tu maestro’
LITERATURE Rossetti 1863, p.216 no.101b, and 1880, p.227 no.123b; Roe 1953, pp.50–1 no.2, repr.; Klonsky 1980, p.137, pl.2; Butlin 1981, p.556 no.812 2; Gizzi 1983, p.80 repr. Also repr.: Savoy, no.3, July 1896, p.43
This is an illustration to Inferno II, 139–42. Dante, in the midst of his mortal life, has found himself lost in a great forest and pursued by three beasts. He encounters Virgil who offers to lead Dante to safety, telling him that this entails a journey through Hell and Purgatory to Paradise. In this design, the second of the series, Virgil leads Dante on through the forest. The title under which the drawing has sometimes been known is a line from the appropriate text, ‘Tu duca, tu signore, e tu maestro’. Blake shows the trees as oaks, perhaps to represent Druidical error.
Published in:
Martin Butlin, William Blake 1757-1827, Tate Gallery Collections, V, London 1990
Explore
- literature and fiction(3,138)
-
- characters(438)
- literature (not Shakespeare)(2,276)
- actions: postures and motions(9,111)
-
- walking(607)
- man(10,453)
- abstract concepts(119)
You might like
-
William Blake The Inscription over the Gate
1824–7 -
William Blake Homer and the Ancient Poets
1824–7 -
William Blake Cerberus
1824–7 -
William Blake The Wood of the Self-Murderers: The Harpies and the Suicides
1824–7 -
William Blake The Simoniac Pope
1824–7 -
William Blake The Devils, with Dante and Virgil by the Side of the Pool
1824–7 -
William Blake The Hypocrites with Caiaphas. Verso: Sketch of a Stooping Figure
1824–7 -
William Blake The Laborious Passage along the Rocks
1824–7 -
William Blake The Primaeval Giants Sunk in the Soil
1824–7 -
William Blake Virgil Girding Dante’s Brow with a Rush
1824–7 -
William Blake The Ascent of the Mountain of Purgatory
1824–7 -
William Blake Dante and Virgil Approaching the Angel Who Guards the Entrance of Purgatory
1824–7 -
William Blake Dante in the Empyrean, Drinking at the River of Light
1824–7 -
William Blake Dante Striking Against Bocca degli Abati
1826–7, reprinted 1968